Stories related to Comet Swift-Tuttle
On the night of July 15 of that year (1862), Lewis Swift, an amateur astronomer in Marathon, New York, was out with his telescope looking for Comet Schmidt, a fairly bright new comet he had read about in the newspaper. Soon he found a fuzzy patch of light in the north sky which he took to be the comet, fainter han expected. But three nights later, Horace Tuttle, at Harvard Observatory, saw the same object and realized it was not Comet Schmidt. After Tuttle annouced the discovery, Swift hastened to make his claim, which, fortunately for him, was accepted.
Your first reaction might be to think poor Tuttle unfairly got second billing in this comet's name.
Horace Tuttle had already discovered several comets and would discover at least one more very important one - Comet Tempel-Tuttle, the parent of the Leonid meteor showers and storms. But Tuttle, after what some called heroic service in the Civil War, was dismissed from the Navy years later, when it was discovered that he had embezzled a small cial success, Horace Tuttle's fate was to die in 1923 with only $70 to his name and to be buried in an unmarked grave.
打印本帖 Print article |
本文发表于2007 June 24 17:25,归类为English Island。您可以通过RSS 2.0来订阅有关的评论。 您也可以留下评论或在您自己的站点跟踪引用。 This entry was posted on 2007 June 24 at 17:25 and filed under English Island. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |